While we’ve all but given up on iPod doing well, we still aren’t getting info on how Apple Watch sold. In its earnings call, Apple CEO Tim Cook said sell-through for the wearable exceeded both the original iPhone and iPad.

Cook also said Apple Watch sales didn’t slow until the final two weeks of the quarter, and the company expects its wearable to be a big seller this holiday season.

Those aren’t sales figures, though.

Speaking to The New York Times, Apple CFO Luca Maestri said the first nine weeks of Apple Watch sales outpaced the first nine weeks of the original iPad. As The Verge points out, Apple once told us it sold 3 million iPods in the first 11 weeks it was available.

That gives us a nice ballpark to cozy into, at least, but no firm data. There are platitudes offered — Apple Watch “exceeded expectations” and Apple is “more excited about its long-term position,” but we still don’t know how many were actually sold.

We can also peek into the “Other Products” category — where Apple lumps the Apple TV and iPod lineup — to see it made $2.7 billion this quarter. That’s a full $1 billion more than last year at this time.

To wit, that’s about $1 billion in Apple Watch sales. The iPod sales figures perennially trended down before Apple dumped it into this category, and Apple TV just saw a price cut. There’s no reason to think any peripheral devices like AirPort saw a massive uptick, so we can reasonably assume the increase in revenue from that category is mostly (if not all) Apple Watch.

If Apple sold roughly 3 million Apple Watches, and made an extra $1 billion in its ‘other’ category, that’s about $333 per Apple Watch. The base Apple Watch Sport starts at $350, so we should also consider other items in the category performed worse this quarter.

Still, we don’t know for sure how Apple Watch is selling. Considering Apple’s attitude about its wearable, we shouldn’t expect to hear any time soon, either. It’s clear Apple considers the Apple Watch a long-term device and platform, and is in no hurry to prove its success to anyone. Apple does have $203 billion in the bank, after all; it doesn’t need to prove a thing.